So what’s the issue here? Warzel doesn’t see any problems for Apple right now but that could change in the future.

“For now, Apple’s ability to produce sexier hardware with superior branding make this less of a problem,” he writes. “But in time, it could lead to various threats to Apple’s ecosystem. The company’s often-confusing iCloud lags behind Google’s, and makes seemingly easy photo and music backups feel wonky and arduous. And services like Google’s new — and truly superior — Photos app look as if they’re going to relegate even more Apple apps to the junk drawer.”

One interesting question this raises is whether Apple needs to develop its own mobile apps at all. Apple may want its users to remain locked into its ecosystem but one of the big advantages iOS has over Android is simply the quality of third-party apps it has. Not only does iOS tend to get the best apps before Android does, but those apps are more often up to date than the ones we see on Android’s more fragmented platform.

And as long as iOS keeps its developers happy with initiatives like its Swift programming language that makes app development easier than ever before, it will probably keep its overall app advantage without having to make killer apps of its own.